Rapper Snoop Dogg is now a reggae performer named Snoop Lion

Snoop puts the Dogg to bed after spiritual awakening in Jamaica, saying he wants to seek out new challenges

Snoop Dogg is dead! Long live Snoop Lion!

The rumors are true! Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr – aka Snoop Doggy Dogg aka the rap legend behind hits like Still A G Thang and Gin n Juice – is no more. Broadus told journalists on Tuesday that he's officially dropped the Dogg act and upgraded his name to "Snoop Lion".

In all seriousness, Snoop says his decision is for real. The rapper says he underwent a spiritual and artistic rebirth while in Jamaica where he's been working on his next album. Rastafarian priests reportedly inspired the name change.

"I went to the temple, where the high priest asked me what my name was, and I said, 'Snoop Dogg'," he told journalists on Tuesday. "And he looked me in my eyes and said: 'No more. You are the light. You are the lion.' From that moment on, it's like I had started to understand why I was there."

Snoop is hardly the first musician to find religion or change his name mid-career, but unlike P Diddy or Cat Stevens, Snoop is also switching genres. Calling rap "no longer a challenge" Snoop says he'll devote the rest of his career to reggae, beginning with his appropriately titled next album "Reincarnation".

"With no disrespect to other rappers, but they can't fuck with me in rap. … I've won every accolade you can get in rap, they call me 'Uncle Snoop' in rap. When you're an uncle, it's time to find something new. … I want to feel like a kid again."

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From Snoop Dogg to Snoop Lion: the reinvention of a gangster rapper

He's the former pimp married to his childhood sweetheart; the shrewd businessman who smokes 30 joints a day. Can the gun-toting Dogg reinvent himself as a peace-loving Lion?

Snoop appears, as if by magic, in a puff of his own smoke. The rapper, actor, gangster and stoner extraordinaire has reinvented himself as a reggae-singing messenger of hope. Snoop Dogg is dead, long live Snoop Lion.

We meet in his management office in Los Angeles, an enormous warehouse dedicated to all things Snoop. On the walls are huge Snoop posters, to the left is the Snoop television studio, where two near-naked women are chatting, and to my right is an old-fashioned video with a stack of Snoop VHSs lined up alongside it.

He slopes in, long and loping, in a white T-shirt, dark jeans and jacket, trainers and shades, blingtastic lion medallion hanging down his chest, patchy Rasta beard, and surprisingly beautiful. He shakes hands, asks one of his homies why there is no oil in his ganja pipe, flicks on the huge flatscreen TV in front of us and starts watching a bit of Snoop history. He is instantly engrossed. No sooner has he sat down than he is up and dancing. "'Baby if you want me…'"

Snoop has just made a documentary that charts his path from gun-toting gangsta-rapper to the peace-and-love Rastafarian who claims to have been reincarnated (the name of both the filmand his new album). I tell him I like the film. "Thank you, man. It's from the heart and soul." He talks about how he has changed as a man, a husband, a father of three. "When you allow evolution to happen, that's when it becomes the greatest thing it could possibly be." He's still staring at the screen and comes to a sudden stop. "Who is that? Is that Rachel from BET [Black Entertainment Television]? Well, whoever she is, she fine as a motherfucker. She pregnant, too. That is Rachel! You bitch, you. Jamaican Rastafari. Yeah, man."

Snoop Lion still has a fair bit of the Dogg in him. But then Snoop Doggy Dogg, as he was first known, was never afraid of embracing his contradictions. He emerged in 1993 with the hugely successful album Doggystyle, and set the pattern for 20 years of guns, gangsters and misogyny. His voice was rich and seductive. His raps were X-rated, yet the kids loved him. He wrote about pimping and dealing on the streets of underclass black America, yet the white middle classes adored him (even the upper classes: Princes William and Harry are fans). Despite the bleak violence he portrayed, there was an innocence to his world – the video to one of his early hits, Gin & Juice, showed partying kids panicking as the parents arrive back early. Only Snoop could dare to write Ain't No Fun (If The Homies Can't Have None), which critics have described as a paean to gang rape, as a love song "for the ladies". He worships the free market, having endorsed everything from Pepsi Max to Norton Anti-Virus Software, and is now worth an estimated $110m. Yet he is a staunch Democrat.

Snoop is one of rap's great survivors. Twenty years on, he is still successful when many of his contemporaries are dead. As a young man he was in and out of prison for drug dealing; in 1993 he was charged with accessory to murder, though he was eventually cleared; a decade ago he combined his successful recording career with pimping (until it put too much stress on his marriage) and in 2006 he was barred from entering the UK after he and his entourage went tonto at Heathrow airport. Yet there is something endearing about Snoop – after all, Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr originally got his nickname because he looked like Snoopy and he still bears a passing resemblance. In 2006, Rolling Stone magazine featured him on its cover under the headline "America's most lovable pimp".

The metamorphosis into Snoop Lion seems pretty radical. What brought about the change? "I wanted to make songs about the life I'm living now as a father and as a 41-year-old man, as opposed to always talking about my childhood and my upbringing."

Couldn't he have done that as a rapper? "I don't think it could have worked through rap because of my branding." Like many rappers, Snoop is a good businessman. "I branded Snoop Doggto be what he is, and it's too late to change the brand." What is that brand? "Gangsta. West coast, from the hood. Speaking for the lost generation – the gangstas, the drug dealers. And I did it 21 years straight, faithfully, till I couldn't do it any more."

He couldn't do it any more, he says, for the simple reason that it would be dishonest to – this hasn't been his life for a long time. "Finally I'm able to say I'm comfortable with doing what I do. And I love doing it. And I'm going to keep doing it. If I don't make another rap record for the next year or two or three, or however long it takes, it don't bother me because I'm trying to make music that feels good."

But, typical Snoop, he makes no bones about the fact that Lion is just an extension of the Dogg brand. The two will happily coexist. Sometimes he will tour as Snoop Dogg, sometimes as Snoop Lion, sometimes as a bit of both.

He offers me his spliff. Though to call it a spliff is an insult really – it's a professionally rolled cigar of pure ganja. An object of beauty, I say.

"You think so?" he says sweetly.

Have you got your own spliff factory?

"I got a couple of homies that do it. We ain't got no factory. But we move like a machine." He speaks slowly, sensually.

I haven't smoked dope for 20-odd years, but to refuse Snoop seems churlish. "You gotta have one hit," he says. I tell him I might make an exception. I inhale. "Welcome to California," he says. It tastes gorgeous – mellow, sweet, lovely. So I have another go. Woosh! Within seconds my head's spinning, I'm spluttering and talking in a falsetto. He grins.

I tell Snoop some of his early videos remind me of the television series Happy Days. He turns away from the giant flatscreen. "The Fonz! And Chachi! That's how life was! We lived like that. We were gangstas, but we were having fun." But those days of innocence didn't last long. By the mid-90s there was civil war between the west and east coast, and rap was becoming a blood bath. By March 1997, two of the greatest rappers – Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls – had been killed within six months of each other.



Snoop with the late rapper Tupac Shakur. Photograph: Sipa Press/Rex Features

How did things go so wrong? "Drugs came into our neighbourhood," he says. "And once the drugs became part of our life, guns were introduced to us, and once you introduce the guns and drugs, it becomes jealousy and protect your neighbourhood, and before you know it somebody gets shot at, and you do shooting. And it just goes on and on. And once somebody gets killed it seems like it's never gonna stop because we are trying to even it out. Homies was getting shot every other night, then one of my family members got killed. And when that happens it's a horrible feeling. You never want to feel that."

Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr was born in Long Beach, California, in 1971. He took his step-father's name – when he was three months old his biological father walked out on the family, though they have since been reconciled. He sang and played piano in the church choir, but gave up the piano when he finished second in a contest. "I was like, I don't want to do this no more, I don't like being second." Was he competitive as a kid? "I hate losing. Even to this day, I'm a sore loser."

By his teens, Snoop was a member of the Rollin' 20s Crips, a notorious Long Beach gang. The funny thing is, he says, people now expect him to look back on his early life with regret, and they couldn't be more wrong. "I wanted to be a gangsta my whole life. Even when I came home from church, we'd see all the gangstas and that was more appealing to me, so when I finally got a chance to live it, to do it, I rapped about it. I was like, I'm going to do it like nobody's ever done it before because my shit is going to be 100% authentic because I come from it and I am it." Being a gangster was a way of transcending poverty; then rapping about life as a gangster became a way of transcending the gangs.

Did being a gangster live up to expectations? "Well hell, yeah, I loved every minute of it. When you ask for it, you've got to be ready to receive it. I knew the job was dangerous when I took it." Was he a good gangster? For once, he pauses. "I don't think there are no good ones," he eventually says.

How surprised is he today to see 41? "Mmm. I did some things that could have cut my days short."

Did he think he would go down when he was charged with accessory to murder? "I did. I thought I was going to go down for that. Every day of my life I thought it was my last day on the streets. When you're in court, you have no real sense of vibe and what is going to be until they read it off. You're in there trying to be on your best behaviour, they're tearing your character down, they're bringing up pictures of you with guns, and the kind of person you was when you was that person, and saying you're still that person, and you're on that witness stand and you can't even say anything."

After he was acquitted, he released his second album, Tha DoggFather, which led to accusations that he was glorying in his gangster status: the intro started with a commentary that he was now more famous for his murder charge than his music. Twenty years on, he has written No Guns Allowed, which he sings with his 13-year-old daughter Cori B. Is it strange for him to be singing an anti-gun song? No, he says, it makes perfect sense. "We keep hearing about schools getting shot up, venues being shot up, public places being shot up, and we have to address that. Who better to do it than me because I come from the gangsta lifestyle, carrying a gun every day of the week lifestyle?"

He talks about the other ways Rastafarianism has changed him. "I used to answer hate with hate. Like if you hate me, I hate you more. But now I answer hate with love." What about your attitude to women? Was there hate in the lyrics of early songs, the bitches and the hos? "Yeah, because I was making music for me, speaking from my perspective. I was taught that a bitch is a ho and a ho was a bitch, so my music represented that, until I got to the point where I wanted to show love and appreciation for the woman."

He's staring at the screen again. "She is fine. She got tush. You know when they got body? If you go to Taco Bell, right, order something to eat, and the bitch looks good in them slacks, imagine what she going to look like when you put her in a skirt." I'm beginning to feel as if I'm in a Tarantino movie.

The more Snoop smokes and the more he focuses on the screen, the easier his words come. Blimey, I say, how many of these do you smoke a day? "Today is a bad day." Does that mean lots? "That means I'm going low. Because I keep getting asked questions so I got to make sure I'm on point. On a bad day 5-10. On a good day 25-30."

Is it true that he smokes with his older son, Corde, 18? "Yeah, he deserve it." Isn't he a good sportsman? "No. He's a good smoker. His brother's a good sportsman. He took on my smoke side, his brother took on my sport side." He turns back to the TV. "Hey, that's Sheila Frazier. Super Fly's girl. Sheila Frazier! Show that bathtub scene!"

As he talks, I notice the semi-clad girls at the back of the room. "Snoop," I say, "the ladies here don't have many clothes on."

He bursts out laughing. "The ladies here don't have many clothes on!" he shouts to his homies in a fey English accent. "That's what the interviewer said! I'm loving it! They're my weather girls. They work for my news network." Snoop's network,GGN, records its shows from here.

It's amazing how much you get away with, I say. I tell him about an article by the feminist writer Julie Bindel, in which she admitted that, despite despising everything Snoop stood for, she adored him. Why does she forgive you? He turns away from the TV. Now this subject really does interest him. "It's not even forgiving, it's you connected to me." He talks about me to illustrate his point: "I might not like the way you dress, but I like the way you talk, so I'll fuck with you." Thanks, I say. I had picked out my jeans, striped top and brothel creepers especially. "You know, for the benefit of the doubt, your outfit ain't really together, but your conversation is sharp. And that's what it is about me. Sometimes it ain't what I say, it's how I say it. So she may appreciate the delivery more than the particular words. It may tickle her fancy. So I'm going to shoot her a shout-out. 'Julie Bindel, I just want to let you know that we really love and appreciate everything about you. And what I want to know is how could you hate my lyrics so much and love me as a person? Please let me know. I would love to know so that way we can get a better connection. Appreciate you.'" The words drip from his tongue.


Ziggy Marley, Robbie Marley, Snoop and Rohan Marley at the Marley film premiere in LA. Photograph: Jim Smeal/BEI/Rex Features

One of the many surprises about Snoop is that he has been with his wife, Shante Taylor, since they were childhood sweethearts – though, it has to be said, not exclusively. He filed for divorce in 2004, but they renewed their wedding vows in 2008 on his reality show, Snoop Dogg's Father Hood. Didn't she go berserk when he wrote all those songs about bitches and hos? "No, she played her position. At the time she was my girlfriend and she became my wife. I made her my wife because I loved her and I loved everything about what she stood for, as far as being there for me, having my kids, and just being a down-ass woman. And when I say I'm going to marry you that means you gotta take the good, the bad and the ugly. And she took everything. She took it when I was doing it this way, doing it that way. She knew."

I ask if that is a reference to his pimping days, when he was already a superstar. Now he gives me a filthy look, as if this time I've really disrespected him. "I mean you make it sound like a game or something. It's for real. You know what I mean? To pimp a bitch is a craft. You couldn't pimp a bitch if I put you in a room with a hundred hos. It's a craft. Some have it, and some don't."

Perhaps his attitude to women hasn't changed so radically. What about homosexuality? "I don't have a problem with gay people. I got some gay homies." He looks round the room and laughs. "Yeah, for real. People who were gay used to get beat up. It was cool to beat up on gay people back then. But in the 90s and 2000s, gay is a way of life. Just regular people with jobs. Now they are accepted, not classified. They just went through the same things we went through as black."

He recently spoke out in support of gay marriage in America. Does he think thatFrank Ocean coming out is a sign of progress in the rap world? "Frank Ocean ain't no rapper. He's a singer. It's acceptable in the singing world, but in the rap world I don't know if it will ever be acceptable because rap is so masculine. It's like a football team. You can't be in a locker room full of motherfucking tough-ass dudes, then all of a sudden say, 'Hey, man, I like you.' You know, that's going to be tough."

Some people have been sceptical about the genesis of Snoop Lion. In the film Reincarnated, reggae legend Bunny Wailer welcomes Snoop to the fold, but he has recently said he feels betrayed; that Snoop's a fake who has let down the Rastafarian community. What does Snoop think he means? "I don't know, you would have to ask him." Does it upset him? "Either you going to roll with or you roll against. I don't roll against what I love. I love what I love. So even if he's shooting negative energy at me, I can't do nothing but match him with my love."

It's not hard to guess what upset many Rastafarians. The title Reincarnated refers to Snoop's statement that he is the reincarnation of Bob Marley. Does he really believe that? He looks me in the eyes and raps. "'Bob Marley reincarnated, pupils dilated, emancipated, concentrated, debated, rated many times, you defy how I made it? Huh?' It is me." I don't know it then, but he's quoting It Blows My Mind, a song he wrote in 2007.

Snoop's minder Killer tells us time is up. But Snoop isn't quite done. "I wanna shoot a shout-out to my homeboys in London: the princes, Harry and William. You know I raised them on this music of mine. They were groomed on me. How you think the Queen like that?" I think she'd hate it, I say. "Goddamn right," Snoops says, "but I'm a part of their revolt. They were at that age when my music spoke to them."

On my way out, I ask if he's still a big fan of Obama. His face breaks out into a huge smile. "Yeah, I love Obama. How could I not love him? This motherfucker got three states smoking weed legally now. And they talk about getting Texas, too. If we can get Texas, goddamn it, it's a wrap. That's what our president did for us."

Did he ever think there would be a black president in his lifetime? "I thought Jesse Jackson could win one time in the late 80s. 'You can win Jesse, you can win.' Then Jesse bullshitted, and fell back in and took the money. Then I had no hope. Ain't no nigga ever going to win, and if the nigga do win, they gonna kill him as soon as he get in office. But this president was different. He was sharp, he had the swagger of a real player but he had the conversation the other people related to, so he wasn't just talking to black people. He made everybody feel he was their guy, and now he's in office doing his thang, he's our guy." Once he starts his Obama love-in, there's no stopping him. "More niggas have been in that White House in the past four years than the entire amount of years that motherfucker was built. And I ain't just talking about sports teams, I'm talking about barbecues, bingo nights, all kinds of shit. Obama cleared out all the music when he got in there. He was like, hold on, clean that music system, get that bullshit outta here. Get some hip-hop, get some motherfuckin' old-time Motown. The refrigerator, he redid all that; get that bullshit out, get some ribs in here." He passes me the spliff. "Hit it one more time. He had some of that in there, too. In the Oval Office. You think he didn't?"

Would Snoop ever go into politics? "Probably," he says casually. "Probably as an old man. If I could make a difference."

But you'd have to cut down on the smoking, I say. "Sheeeeeit. Why? How d'you know politicians ain't smokin' like a motherfucker now?"

It would mean another radical change, but I wouldn't put it past him. Snoop President – the ultimate brand.

• The film Reincarnated is out now; the album is released on 22 April.

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Read Snoop Lion’s ‘No Guns Allowed’ Essay (EXCLUSIVE)


As I write this, my television screen is full of violent and disturbing images from last week’s Boston Marathon bombing.

These images of heartbreak, fear, and panic have become way too common and so have the cases of individuals committing senseless acts of violence and parents losing their innocent children.

Right now feels like the right time for us all to come together to stop the violence, which is why I started the “No Guns Allowed” movement.

Growing up in the streets of Long Beach, I’ve seen the devastation that comes from gun violence firsthand… Homies dead or put in jail at an age way too young. The tragedies that have hit so close to home for many Americans over the last year inspired me to write a song advocating gun responsibility across the board.

The song “No Guns Allowed” is a call to action for people everywhere to come together and help end the senseless gun violence that claims lives every day. I’m not saying I’m against guns, but I’m saying that people need to think about their actions and be responsible for them. It tears my heart to see these people shooting up schools and public places and innocent people becoming victims for no damn reason!

A song like this has to come from the heart, and for me, the message is particularly powerful because I am a father. A lot of the people pulling the trigger haven’t lived long enough to experience a long life full of love, but I know there’s still time for them to walk in the path of peace.

It’s why I asked my daughter, Cori B., to be a part of this song. And why I asked Drake to help spread this positive message. It’s more than a song — it’s a unified powerful call to action to end violence and increase gun responsibility. It’s a movement that ALL of us can take part in, ya dig?

It’s also humbling that an organization like the League of Young Voters Education Fund fully supports my movement. They’ve created a non-violence campaign in the spirit of “No Guns Allowed” with an online petition on Causes.com.

The petition pushes universal background checks and funding for violence prevention programs. I’m getting down with them to encourage people to use the #NoGunsAllowed hashtag on their social media to help spread the word by sharing personal messages, stories and photos about how gun violence has affected their lives.

I’ve also teamed up with MTV and Jewelry For a Cause for this “No Guns Allowed” movement. We created a special bracelet engraved with the serial number of an illegal gun recently turned in through a gun buyback in Newark, NJ. A portion of the proceeds from each sale benefits the Newark Police Department gun buyback programs and can be purchased at Jewelry For A Cause.



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Snoop Lion Partners With Reed's Ginger Brew and Causes.com to Raise Awareness for the Mind Gardens Project in Jamaica

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – Nov 13, 2012) – Today, pop culture icon Snoop Lion is excited to announce a new partnership in support of the Mind Gardens Project, his latest non-profit initiative to establish sustainable, organic community gardens that will provide fresh fruits and vegetables to school aged children in Jamaica. Beverage maker Reed’s Ginger Brew has joined the effort to give back to Jamaica, adding momentum as they prepare to launch a massive Mind Gardens awareness campaign on Causes.com. (NASDAQ: REED)

Earlier this year, Snoop Lion unveiled his latest project, Reincarnated, which consists of a soon-to-be released album, a photo book, and a feature length documentary by VICE Films and Snoopadelic films illustrating Snoop’s evolution and transition from rap to reggae. This dramatic change came about as a result of Snoop’s recent personal journey to Jamaica and his time spent with the culture and people of the land. Wanting to give something back in return, Snoop partnered with entrepreneur and philanthropist John Paul DeJoria of Paul Mitchell and Patrón Spirits for the Mind Gardens Project.

“When I went to Jamaica we took time to visit these communities in Kingston, and I was deeply affected by the poverty and lack of good food available to the children,” says Snoop Lion. “No child should go hungry. After all the inspiration Jamaica had provided me, I felt compelled to create a program to give back to the community.”

The Mind Gardens Project has already begun work in Kingston, Jamaica with locations in the neighborhoods of Trench Town and Tivoli Gardens. Here, local residents are provided with tools and resources to help them effectively grow their own food. Plans for additional domestic and international locations are in the works for the future.

As a first step to help raise awareness for the initiative, the Mind Gardens Project, with the support of Reed’s Ginger Brew, has launched a campaign on Causes.com, which empowers people to take the Mind Gardens Pledge and make an effort to learn more about their own local community gardens. Everyone who takes the pledge will have the chance to win a year’s supply of Reed’s Ginger Brew by visiting www.causes.com/mindgardens. As the Mind Gardens Project launches, the partnership with Reed’s Ginger Brew brings a new element of positive synergy and perfectly complements Snoop Lion’s efforts to provide children with proper nutrition. Reed’s Ginger Brews, founded in 1989, is based on traditional Jamaican style ginger ales or “ginger beers” as the locals call it. When Reed’s CEO and Founder, Chris Reed, learned of Snoop Lion’s Mind Gardens Project, he knew he wanted to get involved.

“We’ve been looking for a way to give back to Jamaica,” says Chris Reed. “Nothing is more basic than food in helping people help themselves. Snoop helping to educate the world on how to eat better, and encouraging communities to grow their own organic food — this is very positive change. We are also excited about rolling out this project to many U.S. cities. My company has always tried to offer people better, healthier options when it comes to what they drink. Our larger goal is about helping people live better, healthier lives. Snoop’s Mind Gardens Project is in line with our vision. We have committed a percentage of our sales this year to help fund the program.”

“This is just the start, we have some big plans to roll out Mind Gardens stateside in the year to come,” says Snoop Lion. “We can all do our part to help people eat healthier and live better. Bless up! Jah Rastafari!”

About The Mind Gardens Project
Launched in Kingston, Jamaica in late 2012, Mind Gardens is a non-profit initiative started by Snoop Lion and John Paul DeJoria, with the goal of establishing sustainable, organic community gardens that will provide fresh fruits and vegetables to school aged children in the community. Bringing these communities the proper tools and resources to cultivate their own nutritional alternatives not only makes for healthy bodies, but also healthy minds. With two gardens already underway, we need your help to spread the word, build more gardens and take this project worldwide. Together we can plant a seed, grow a garden, and change a life.

About Snoop Lion
Snoop Lion is the new moniker of multi-platinum artist and entertainment icon, Snoop Dogg, whose ability to stay at the forefront of popular culture and new technology has resulted in unwavering relevance. Snoop Lion, in conjunction with VICE Media and Stampede Management, are set to release Reincarnated, a project that grew from Snoop’s recent trip to Jamaica where the people and culture positively affected him. The project includes a reggae album produced by Diplo and the Major Lazer production team, a feature-length documentary of his life and career, which premiered at the 2012 Toronto Film Festival to rave reviews, as well as a photo book. The fullReincarnated project is set to release early 2013.

About Reed’s Ginger Brew
Reed’s, Inc. (NASDAQ: REED) makes the top-selling natural sodas in the natural foods industry sold in over 13,000 natural and mainstream supermarkets nationwide. Its six award-winning non-alcoholic Ginger Brews are unique in the beverage industry, being brewed, not manufactured and using fresh ginger, spices and fruits in a brewing process that predates commercial soft drinks. The Company owns the top-selling root beer line in natural foods, the Virgil’s Root Beer product line, and the top-selling cola line in natural foods, the China Cola product line. In 2012, the Company launched Reed’s Culture Club Kombucha line of organic live beverages. Other product lines include: Reed’s Ginger Candies and Reed’s Ginger Ice Creams. In 2009, Reed’s started producing private label natural beverages for select national chains. Reed’s products are sold through specialty gourmet and natural food stores, mainstream supermarket chains, retail stores and restaurants nationwide, and in Canada, as well as through private label relationships with major supermarket chains.

About Causes

Causes.com is an online platform that provides tools for driving change. With 180 million users and over 500,000 campaigns for change, Causes is the world’s largest platform for activism and philanthropy. Causes enables grassroots organizers, nonprofits and companies to run online, social impact campaigns that raise brand awareness, engage targeted audiences, and build dynamic communities.

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Bunny Wailer slams Snoop Lion for 'fraudulent' appropriation of Rastafari culture



Photo: PA

Snoop Dogg has been accused by Bunny Wailer, former drummer for The Wailers, of faking his Snoop Lion persona to sell records.



Bunny Wailer claims that the forthcoming Snoop Lion album 'Reincarnated' and a documentary of the same name are "fraudulent" and is threatening legal action against the rapper. Wailer claims Snoop has engaged in "outright fraudulent use of Rastafari Community's personalities and symbolism" and that he has also failed to meet "contractual, moral and verbal commitments". 

Additionally, the Ethio-Africa Diaspora Union Millennium Council (aka Rastafari Millennium Council) have sent a seven-page list of demands to Snoop. The document was obtained by TMZ and includes them telling the rapper that; "smoking weed and loving Bob Marley and reggae music is not what defines the Rastafari Indigenous Culture!"

The Rastafari Council are seeking fulfillment of the "financial and moral support" they claim Snoop committed to but as well as a public apology.

The rapper has previously said that he doesn't have to justify his change in direction as he has complete freedom in his creative direction. The Reincarnated documentary will explain his new direction. "If I just drop this music, it leaves room for questioning," he said. "You wouldn't understand the whole journey or the transformation. When I allow you to see the movie, to go on the journey with me, to see exactly why I'm the Lion."

Snoop Lion played his first live show in Toronto, Canada in 2012 which featured covers of Bob Marley's 'Could You Be Loved' and 'Iron Lion Zion'. He has subsequently released tracks including 'Lighters Up' and 'Here Comes The King'.


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Snoop Lion, 'Reincarnated': Track-By-Track Review



Snoop Lion, formerly known as Snoop Dogg, announced his embracement of the Rastafarian way of life following a visit to Jamaica in 2012. While there he took part in reasoning sessions with Rastafarian elders, among them The Wailers’ sole living founding member Bunny Wailer. The elders’ insights prompted Snoop to bury the Dogg and take on the lion. Leonine references are prominent in Rastafari and roots reggae lyrics because The Conquering Lion of Judah was one of the titles bestowed upon Rastafarian Deity Haile Selassie I when he ascended to the throne of Ethiopian Emperor on November 2, 1930.

Snoop, born in 1971, has declared himself the reincarnation of Bob Marley who passed away in 1981. A feature-length documentary, "Reincarnated," detailing Snoop’s Jamaica sojourn and spiritual transformation was released in March. His reggae album of the same name, recorded mostly during his Jamaica trip, drops today (April 23), when Rastafarians in Jamaica, coincidentally, solemnly observe the 47th anniversary of Haile Selassie I’s only visit to the island, April 21-23, 1966.

Tired of the rap game, Snoop sought a positive persona, which he found in Rasta and reggae. "I was at the forefront of the most violent time in hip hop… that’s what forced me to find a new path and I found peace; I am still Snoop (motherfucking) Dogg ‘til I die but when I make my reggae music I am in the light of Snoop Lion," declared the "Gin and Juice" rapper in the Reincarnated documentary. Numerous fans and critics have queried Snoop’s credibility as a Rastafarian reggae artist. Alternately viewed as an attention-grabbing career move or a misguided mid-life meltdown, only Snoop knows if his Rasta conversion is the outcome of genuine spiritual enlightenment or feigned cultural affectation but the overall lightweight lyrical content of the "Reincarnated" album, and the absence of (Jamaican) Rastafarian contributions to the project, suggests the latter.

Rastafari has significantly shaped roots reggae’s subject matter: the reverence of Haile Selassie I (whom many Rastas cite as Christ incarnate or God) and the visionary pan-African teachings of Jamaican freedom fighter Marcus Garvey (which includes celebrating African identity) are two of the faith’s most salient tenets and have been espoused in reggae song’s since the music’s late 60s inception. Such Afro-centric viewpoints were once considered so radical in Jamaica, Rastas were persecuted, driven from their dwellings, their dreadlocks shorn or they were just shot on sight. To support his stated mission of "paying homage and giving love to those who created reggae music and what it was made for" Snoop should have recruited at least one veteran Jamaican Rastafarian artist as a collaborator on "Reincarnated." Guest vocalists are included on 11 of the 12 tracks on the album’s U.S. edition yet not a single Jamaica based Rastafarian reggae act, from pioneering singers of the 1960s to 20-something year old sing-jays who keep Rasta struggles in the forefront of their music, participated in Snoop’s reggae venture. Several tracks celebrate marijuana, considered a sacrament among Rastas, but Snoop did that in his Dogg days and smoking herb does not make a Rasta.

In early April, Bunny Wailer "excommunicated" Snoop from Rastafari, (on Facebook, no less) citing "fraudulent use of Rastafari personalities and symbolism." Wailer didn’t mention if an advance copy of "Reincarnated" influenced his decision.

Nonetheless, aside from the casting, Snoop’s grandiose notion of his rebirth as Marley and no guest appearances by those on reggae’s frontline, "Reincarnated" stands as an enjoyable pop record laced with an assortment of roots and dancehall reggae references. Its sprinkling of Rasta ideology has, laudably, redirected Snoop’s gangsta lyrical exploits towards enriching themes such as ending gang wars and curbing gun violence. Recorded primarily at Jamaica’s luxurious Geejam Studios, the set’s executive producer, Diplo, strikes an alluring balance between roots reggae’s one-drop drum and bass driven rhythms, samplings of classic dancehall beats and his signature electronic flourishes.

1. "Rebel Way"
"Nuff of dem can’t take it when the lion roar," Snoop tenuously sings, announcing his new pathway where "love is the cure, courage is the weapon you can use to overcome."It’s a sincere, if vocally unspectacular, introduction to his enlightened persona,over a dub reggae meets hip-hop beat produced by Dre Skull, embellished with the filigreed guitar work of Willy Dintenfass.


2. "Here Comes the King" featuring Angela Hunte


Thankfully, Snoop’s not heralding his arrival as the king of reggae. He’s referencing the regality Rasta imparts to each of its adherents although the references to smoking an enemy like paper is more appropriate for the Dogg than the Lion. Snoop vacillates between toasting with an uneasy faux Jamaican accent and his much more organically rapped verses, while co-writer Angela Hunte (Jay-Z and Alicia Keys’ "Empire State of Mind") provides the snappy, childlike chorus.

3. "Lighters Up" featuring Mavado and Popcaan

One of the album’s best is essentially a hip-hop jam, featuring the innovative brass embellishments of Jamaica’s Tivoli Gardens Drum Corp and Jamaican dancehall artists Mavado and Popcaan, (the latter a protégé of Mavado’s former nemesis Vybz Kartel), respectively representing their (previously feuding) Gully and Gaza camps. Ironically, Mavado and Popcaan don’t acknowledge each other on this unity anthem, or in the video where each flanks Snoop. But kudos to the Lion for bringing these artists together, even if it is just for the duration of the song.

4. "So Long " featuring Angela Hunte
"So Long" is a roots jam about maintaining strength on life’s journey with top billing going to the call and response interplay between Snoop and Hunte. Yet, it’s the hook sung by Guyanese-American, Jahdan Blakkamoore, that provides the song’s sweetly melodic retro-reggae feel. Blakkamore’s backing vocals add a subtle yet rich texture throughout the entire album often enhancing Snoop’s lead.

5. "Get Away" featuring Angela Hunte

Major Lazer’s thumping rave track disrupts the album’s reggae and dancehall flavor. Snoop seems stranded in the sea of electronic propulsion, never quite getting past chanting the song’s title. Hunte’s energetic vocals should be framed by the rhythm, not competing with it as they do here.

6. "No Guns Allowed" featuring Drake and Cori B


"Rasta music is all about love and positivity, not shooting, beating people up and riding and killing. I get that and I want that, that’s the kind of record I want," said Snoop in the "Reincarnation" promotional video referencing "No Guns Allowed," a heartfelt commentary on the insanity of societal violence. Snoop’s tenderly sung message is punctuated by the accompanying vocals of his daughter Cori B and a hard-hitting verse by Drake all supported by Diplo’s hauntingly sparse one-drop beat and gentle percussive accents provided by former Police drummer Stewart Copeland.

7. "Fruit Juice" featuring Mr. Vegas
Diplo loops a sample of Jamaican keyboardist Noel Davey’s 1985 Sleng Teng riddim, which ignited Jamaican music’s digital revolution, over which Snoop and Mr. Vegas ostensibly name-check various fruit juices (sans the gin) although a lyrical double-entendre is definitely at play. Despite Vegas’ enviable, quick-paced rhyming skills, he searches in vein for a memorable hook.

8. "Smoke The Weed" featuring Collie Buddz

The refrain from Michael Palmer's (a.k.a Palma Dog) 1984 reggae hit, "Don’t Smoke The Seed," along with a digitized replication of that song’s rhythmic hook, is reworked into an irresistible 21st century marijuana anthem. Perhaps its his enthusiasm for the subject matter but Snoop shifts between Jamaican patois and rapped verses with an ease he doesn’t manage elsewhere. Collie Buddz whose name is a homage to herb, conquers the rhythm with his smoke fueled, chronic-championing rhymes.

9. "Tired of Running" featuring Akon

"This gangsta life ain’t no longer in me," Akon sings on "Tired of Runnin'" from his 2006 album "Konvicted." Here the song has adapted to a slow burning reggae groove. Akon’s lyrical reflection on a life of crime provides an apt, effective encapsulation of Snoop’s stated new direction.

10. "The Good Good" featuring Iza
Snoop and Iza aim for mainstream with this cheerful but disposable summer pop-reggae ditty. Iza is the first artist signed to Snoop’s new Berhane Sound System/Boss Lady Entertainment label. Interestingly, Berhane Selassie, which means "Light of the Holy Trinity, in the Ethiopian language of Amharic, was the name taken by Bob Marley when he was baptized in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church in November 1980, six months prior to his passing.

11. "Torn Apart" featuring Rita Ora

A rumbling bass line overlaid with swirling synths and majestic horn blasts drives an incessantly upbeat reggae tempo that is seemingly at odds with the song’s tale of heartbreak. Snoop and Rita are in great spirits on their debut pop-reggae collaboration, despite dealing with the topic of lost love. They convey an easy familiarity usually reserved for longstanding vocal sparring partners.

12. "Ashtrays and Heartbreaks" featuring Miley Cyrus"Ashtrays and Heartbreaks" is an effective up-in-smoke pop-reggae tribute to those who have departed. Snoop’s simple lyrics ("what goes up must come down… when it’s right something always will go wrong") and bland delivery are enlivened by Miley’s chirpy vocals as she fills up ashtrays, smokes the weed to cope with her losses.

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Snoop Dogg changes name to Snoop Lion, says he is Bob Marley reincarnated



Snoop Dogg wants you to know that he's tired of hip-hop, is Bob Marley reincarnated and is embracing reggae instead of the culture of guns he once rapped about.

Also, he's got a new name: Snoop Lion.

The artist said at a news conference Monday in New York that he was "born again" during a visit to Jamaica in February and is ready to make music that his "kids and grandparents can listen to."

The former gangster rapper is releasing a reggae album called "Reincarnated" in the fall. He said that in Jamaica, he connected with Bob Marley's spirit and is now "Bob Marley reincarnated."

Bob Marley's son Rohan attended the conference and gave Snoop his blessing.

"I feel like I've always been Rastafarian," Snoop said of the spiritual Jamaican movement. While there, he said, he visited a temple, was renamed Snoop Lion and was also given the Ethiopian name Berhane, meaning "light of the world."

Snoop didn't explain why he was switching from "Dogg" to "Lion," but it's likely a reference to the Lion of Judah, a religious symbol popular in Rastafarian and Ethiopian culture.

Later, he played five songs for a small crowd, including one called "No Guns Allowed." It features his daughter and includes the lyrics, "No guns allowed in here tonight, we're going to have a free for all, no fights."

"It's so tragic that people are doing stupid things with guns," he said.

Snoop, best known for hits like "Gin and Juice" and "Drop It Like It's Hot," is an avid supporter of marijuana rights and has been banned from entering Norway for two years after trying to enter the country with a small amount last month.

He said that in Jamaica, where he stayed for 35 days, he grew closer to his wife, who saw his transition. He added that he's excited to perform music that his family and children can listen to.

"As a 40-year-old man ... I've got to give them something," he said. "That's what you do when you're wise."

Snoop Dogg said he's not completely retiring from hip-hop but is "tired" of the genre because it is no longer challenging.

"Reggae was calling ... it's a breath of fresh air," he said. "Rap isn't challenging; it's not appealing."

The album was produced by Diplo and will feature Snoop singing. It will be released on Vice Records.

The album will be followed with a documentary of the same name, also produced by Vice. It features Snoop making music and will include some personal elements of his life, a producer of the film said. It will debut at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

A coffee table book about Snoop's rebirth is also in the works.

"It feels like I'm 19 or 20 years old again," he said

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